That would make sense, the rural customer was the original bread and butter of the DBS companies in the mid 90's (DirecTV, USSB, Primestar, and Dish). For many (myself included) cable was or is not available so TVRO, DBS, or OTA was the only option. I had TVRO for many years prior to finally going with DBS about 2001. Also, in a lot of rural areas, and small towns, even if they are served by cable, it is expensive and the service is horrible (few channels, still analog only, no HD, etc...).
Yeah, good points all. And don't forget the REALLY MINOR DEMOGRAPHIC like those of us who don't live in a sticks 'n bricks house at all, but travel around the planet (at least the not water part) aimlessly in an RV full time. I wonder what the Census says about folks like us? Last I heard, of the 300 million or so pop of the US, there are less than 200,000 of us. what's that, like 0.06% if my math is correct? And of THOSE, how many of us fulltimers have a Hopper 3 installed? Not many, I'd guess. I like that. "The allure of the obscure", I call it.
Cheers. Gene